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For the first time in its 40-year history, The Grinnell Magazine has been honored by the CASE Circle of Excellence Award program. The magazine won a silver award in the "Best Articles of the Year" category for "Campus Mystery: My Search for the Duclod Man," by freelance writer Sarah Aswell '04. Like a number of Grinnell students and alumni over the last 15 years, she received a disturbing anonymous letter from the "duclod man." Read the fascinating story of Aswell's search for the letter-writer through some of the darkest, most shadowy corners of the Internet.
With the summer heat slowly creeping in, we're all hoping for something — a spot in a poolside deck chair, perhaps, or some long-awaited vacation time. This issue of The Grinnell Magazine focuses on Grinnellians whose hope transformed both their lives and the fabric of their communities, even if that progress meant overcoming terrific obstacles.
After 23 years leading the Rosenfield Program in Public Affairs, International Relations, and Human Rights, Professor Wayne Moyer is preparing to leave his position. In this issue's cover story, Wayne's World, Richard Cleaver '75 celebrates the successes of the Rosenfield Program during Moyer's tenure and looks ahead to the program's future.
Sometimes the work of a Grinnell administrator means celebrating a happy, healthy campus — and sometimes it means helping students through confusing and painful times. After her first academic year as special assistant to the president for diversity and achievement, in Making Love Mail, Elena M. Bernal '94 writes about the challenge of dealing with hate mail and guiding the campus through a necessary and meaningful response.
While Bernal focuses on fighting back against hatred, Jacqueline Hartling Stolze tells the story of Grinnellians who survived the unthinkable horror of experiencing the Holocaust as children. Defying Darkness introduces you to three individuals (Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies Harold Kasimow, Celina Karp Biniaz '52, and Sam Harris '58) whose hope pulled them through one of the darkest points in history.
Hope is instrumental in enacting change, whether the changes are small or large, personal or international. Mansir Petrie '99's photo essay, Children of Zambézia, demonstrates the effect of hope in the face of the AIDS/HIV epidemic, while Beijing Dreams focuses on four Grinnellians with Olympic aspirations. Whether they demonstrate an abiding faith in oneself, others, or a community, these pieces prove that Grinnellians worldwide can turn beliefs and ideas into undeniable progress.
Also
Campus News
Springtime on the Grinnell campus is always a whirlwind of activity — get inside the sound and the flurry with our stories of what's new on campus!
Letters!
Find out what your fellow Grinnellians think about what they read in The Grinnell Magazine.
Online Extras
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The Grinnell Magazine is published quarterly for alumni, students, parents, faculty, and
friends of the College by the Office of Communication and Events. The contents of this
magazine are selected to stimulate thought and discussion, to demonstrate the range of
opinions and activities on the campus and in its broader community, and to provide news
about the College and its alumni.
Vice-President for College and Alumni Relations
Mickey Munley '87
Director of Communication
Kate Worster '87
Editor
Jacqueline Hartling Stolze
Art Director / Designer
Jim Powers
Classnotes Editor
Bonnie Primley
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